Alec Baldwin leaves court after his lawyers claimed to have video that shows the actor did not punch a man during an alleged parking dispute.

Video evidence proves Alec Baldwin didn’t throw a punch in his latest dust up over a parking spot near the actor’s Greenwich Village home, the contentious celebrity’s attorney said Monday.

“There is incontrovertible video evidence that has been turned over to the district attorney’s office that proves beyond all doubt that Mr. Baldwin never punched anyone,” said Baldwin’s lawyer Alan Abramson at Baldwin’s arraignment on attempted assault and harassment charges in Manhattan Criminal Court.

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Abramson said the star — known for his high-profile outbursts and tantrums — “did not commit any crime and we’re confident that once this matter is fully investigated it will be resolved swiftly and appropriately in court.”

Baldwin, 60, who wore a purple polo shirt, dark pants and thick-rimmed glasses, did not speak to reporters as he came and went.

Baldwin was arrested on Nov. 2 and charged with assault and harassment for the 1:30 p.m. altercation on E. 10th St. near Fifth Ave.

He was accused of sucker-punching 49-year-old motorist Wojciech Cieszkowski for pulling his Saab station wagon into a parking spot that Baldwin was expecting to take.

Alec Baldwin is arraigned next to his attorney Alan Abramson in Manhattan Criminal Court on November 26, 2018 in New York. (Alec Tabak for New York Daily News)

As Cieszkowski went to the meter to pay, Baldwin followed him and hit him, sources said.

“I observed the defendant push me and then strike me across the left side of my face with his closed right hand, resulting in pain to my face,” Cieszkowski told authorities, according to court papers.

Baldwin admitted to cops on the scene that he put his hands on Cieszkowski, prosecutors allege.

“He's an a--hole. He stole my spot. I did push him,” Baldwin blurted out to Police Officer Louis Avellino after the confrontation, according to court papers.

Baldwin was issued a desk appearance ticket at the 6th Precinct and ordered to appear in Manhattan Criminal Court. He sounded off on Twitter later that day, denying any wrongdoing.

“Normally, I would not comment on something as egregiously misstated as today’s story,” he said. “However, the assertion that I punched anyone over a parking spot is false.

Baldwin has a long history of hot-headed behavior, often aimed at the press. He was accused of attacking a former Daily News photographer in 2012 outside the Marriage Bureau in Lower Manhattan. He was not charged in connection to the incident.

He also went after a reporter and photographer from another New York newspaper in separate ordeals in 2013. Baldwin was seen throwing the scribe’s phone and pinning him against an SUV, a day after flipping out on a lensman outside his home, hurling homophobic insults.

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The “30 Rock actor also got a disorderly conduct summons in 2014 after arguing with police who gave him a summons for riding his bike the wrong way on a one-way street.

Three years prior, he was famously booted from a plane for refusing to pause a “Words with Friends” game on his phone before take off.